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Genetic analysis of failed male puberty using whole exome sequencing

Authors :
Maleeha, Akram
David J, Handelsman
Mazhar, Qayyum
Marina, Kennerson
Sania, Rauf
Shahid, Ahmed
Osama, Ishtiaq
Muhammad, Ismail
Qaisar, Mansoor
Afzaal Ahmed, Naseem
Syed Shakeel Raza, Rizvi
Source :
Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism. 35:1410-1421
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2022.

Abstract

Objectives Although at least 598 genes are involved in the development of the hypothalamo–pituitary–testicular (HPT) axis, mutations in only 75 genes have so far been shown to cause delayed puberty. Methods Six male patients with failed puberty, manifested as absence of pubertal changes by 18 years of age, underwent whole exome sequencing of genomic DNA with subsequent bioinformatics analysis and confirmation of selected variants by Sanger sequencing. Genes having plausibly pathogenic non-synonymous variants were characterized as group A (previously reported to cause delayed puberty), group B (expressed in the HPT-axis but no mutations therein were reported to cause delayed puberty) or group C (not reported previously to be connected with HPT-axis). Results We identified variants in genes involved in GnRH neuron differentiation (2 in group A, 1 in group C), GnRH neuron migration (2 each in groups A and C), development of GnRH neural connections with supra-hypothalamic and hypothalamic neurons (2 each in groups A and C), neuron homeostasis (1 in group C), molecules regulating GnRH neuron activity (2 each in groups B and C), receptors/proteins expressed on GnRH neurons (1 in group B), signaling molecules (3 in group C), GnRH synthesis (1 in group B), gonadotropins production and release (1 each in groups A, B, and C) and action of the steroid hormone (1 in group A). Conclusions Non-synonymous variants were identified in 16 genes of the HPT-axis, which comprised 4 in group A that contains genes previously reported to cause delayed puberty, 4 in group B that are expressed along HPT-axis but no mutations therein were reported previously to cause delayed puberty and 8 in group C that contains novel candidate genes, suggesting wider genetic causes of failed male puberty.

Details

ISSN :
21910251 and 0334018X
Volume :
35
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7b3e34643489649d11d3c34312ced0d5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515/jpem-2022-0254